Don't know if anyone saw it, but there was a fascinating PBS program entitled "Evolution" on TV last weekend. It seemed to be a series, although I hadn't heard of it. Anyway, this particular segment focused largely on a number of students at a Christian college (Wheaton) which had a policy requiring faculty to declare their belief in Adam and Eve as the beginning of human lineage. The students were trying to reconcile their biblically based beliefs with their sense that evolution was a legitimate theory. As counterpoint, they presented the views of a man who believed that the Bible was to be read absolutely literally, meaning, above all, that the Earth and all its creatures was created in 6 days -- that is 6 literal, modern-time, 24 hour days, no ifs, ands, or buts. He taught his followers that if someone ever said "X millions of years ago . . . " to respond "Were you there?"
I'm not ready to pony up my own beliefs here, but anyone really interested in this topic might check for a re-run of this series on their local PBS station -- I found it very interesting. There was also a part about some high school students that started a movement to get "Special Creationism" (not sure exactly what that was or how it differed from Creationism) taught along-side evolution, and some Christian high school biology teachers that had reconciled their faith with their science. Very interesting stuff.
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My karma ran over my dogma.
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